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Breaking Balls

Lookin' at the 12-to-6 from 9 to 5.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

 

A Rare Admission

I'm as quick as the next guy to decry the Red Sox-Yankees slant of all major TV sports coverage. I think, from the standpoint that ESPN had before yesterday's game, they made a huge mistake not covering the Phillies-Mets or Dodgers-Diamondbacks game last night. The Yankees had a safe lead in the Wild Card and the Red Sox had a safe lead in the AL East. And while the Red Sox and Yankees may very well be the two best teams in the AL (and thus, by default, the major leagues as well), this is mid-September and there are pennant races afoot! Even still, I resigned myself to the bias and managed to catch most of the game, albeit initially begrudgingly.

You might want a screen grab of this one, because it's not gonna happen often: I was wrong. Seriously, ESPN made the right call. Or maybe they just got lucky, I don't know, but that was one of the most wild (not to mention sloppy) games of baseball I've seen in this season. It lasted almost five hours in total, saw 388 pitches and four errors.

Also, Oregon's own Jacoby Ellsbury continued to make his case for a starting job in the playoffs over poorly tied garbage bag and festering intestinal wound J.D. Drew. Ellsbury's hard-charging play led to a stolen base on a successful pickoff attempt, which eventually allowed him to score. Let's just say he's making the Red Sox look really smart for not resigning Johnny Damon (who, to his credit, went 4-6 with two doubles).

Anyway, I admit it. Showing the Red Sux-Yankmes game was the right call, and it resulted in one of the most exciting games of the season so far (I'm not sure it beats this one). Oh yeah, and with Greg Dobbs recording the game winning RBI in the bottom of the tenth, everything stays close in the NL Wild Card. But here we go again, as Fox airs the Red Sox-Yankees game yet one more time.

Comments:

Man, the pennant races and soon the playoffs are really going to make me wish that I had a television. Late September and October baseball is just as good as it gets, even when your team is in last place and you just want it to all be over for a little while to regroup (though there'll be no refuge from Barry Zito's contract for quite some time).
 
Zito's contract is big and bad, but at least he has the capacity to help a team win. The problem is the Pedro Feliziness of the lineup and the quatrogenarianism of the position players. I actually like the Giants pitching future, with Lincecum, Cain, Sanchez, Zito and, er...Ortiz? I can't be convinced that Noah Lowry hasn't spent his status as an up-and-comer. But Jesus Christ, has he outperformed his peripherals! How do you spin an 87:87 K:BB ratio and 9 hits per nine into an ERA below 4? TRADE HIM NOW (to the Pirates, if possible).
 
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